CCG has long-standing interests in domestic policy and reform research, and has provided constructive policy advice on China's openness index, regions and cities, the Greater Bay Area economy, and urban-rural integration.
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Trends in the Global ICT Industry—Globalization, Competition and the Internet of Things
Three super-large firms—Amazon, Microsoft and Alphabet-Google—have leveraged their dominant position to establish an early lead in cloud computing software and services. These three behemoths account for 38% of the total R&D spending and 34% of the net sales revenue for the 321 firms in the G2500 ICT software and services sector.
June 06 , 2022 -
China, Thailand and Globalization
On the regional front, 2021 marks the 30th Anniversary of the ASEAN-China dialogue process, which started in 1991, evolving into a strategic and comprehensive partnership covering all sectors of cooperation and fostering an intensive network of cooperation between the countries of Southeast Asia and China. This has ultimately resulted in ASEAN and China becoming each other’s largest trading partner and travel destination.
June 06 , 2022 -
Jörg Wuttke: A Roadmap to Bolstering EU-China Relations
European multinational companies (MNCs) in China are not making plans based on the next one or two years—they are looking to the next one or two decades. While there is no sign of “decoupling” between Europe and China, there is a growing political story to be told and business is becoming increasingly politicized.
June 05 , 2022 -
CCG Report | The Ukraine Crisis Isn’t the End of Globalization
The outbreak of the Ukraine crisis has had a dramatic and far-reaching influence on economies, trade and investment around the world. The limited nature of Russia and Ukraine in the global economy, trade volumes and participation in globalization means that the economic impact of the current crisis on global investment, trade and global value chains is relatively small.
June 05 , 2022 -
Hermann Hauser: Technology, Sovereignty and Realpolitik
In the future, every nation or group of nations must ask itself three questions: Do we have control over critical technologies? If not, do we have access to critical technologies from a number of independent countries? If still not, do we have guaranteed, unfettered, long-term (more than 5 years) access to monopoly or oligopoly suppliers of a single country (Typically this will be the US or China)? If the answer to all three questions is no, then that nation is open to economic coercion that is no less severe than the military coercion of yesteryear.
June 04 , 2022